Late last year, Euro RSCG London created a :30 for French car maker Citroen which turned the new Citroen C4 into a dancing robot complete with choreography from Justin Timberlake's choreographer Marty Kudelka and music from the Les Rythmes Digitales song Jacques Your Body. Now, as with all great ads, the dancing Citroen spot has been spoofed.

Alex Mallison of X-bam illustration spent two weeks working hard to recreate the Citroen spot but with an interesting and very humorous twist. View the original here and the Mallison version here.

U.K. prankster ASABAILEY has set up a mock charity group designed to support traditional agency folks who have been laid off. The site, TwatsLondon, appears to be a spoof of another job charity site, the seemingly legit NABS. We're too jet-lagged from AD:TECH to actually research this for you.

PUMA had one. Why not Mastercard? In a spoof of an old ad campaign called Indecent Proposal, we have a young man walking his date to the door in that cutesy and romantically awkward way when out of the blue comes, "So, how 'bout a blow job?"

So here they are. At first, these ads were thought to be real. To have run in Maxim magazine in Brazil (see below). Then, it was thought to be a viral stunt by PUMA itself. Then, it became known that PUMA had nothing to do with them and that they were just created by someone to have some fun. They are, in fact, fake ads.

Never knew sneakers could be so exciting.

A little chronology:

(1/8/06: A lot of these links are broken because they are external and it's been almost three years since the story originally broke. Sorry.)

1. According to "dabitch" from Adland in my comment section below, the ads are running in Maxim in Brazil. More on that here. (This is now not true)

"It has been brought to our attention that several unauthorized, sexually suggestive advertisements portraying the PUMA brand have been released over the Internet. We are appalled that images like these would be created and distributed under the PUMA name. As a brand, we seek to take a unique perspective toward our advertising in an effort to challenge the boundaries of our industry; however we would never consider using these tactics. We are in the process of researching the circumstances and reserve any legal steps available."

4. They are, in fact, fake as stated in this press statement from PUMA. [via Gawker via Yahoo via WSJ]